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Entries categorized as ‘jobs’

Poland launches campaign to lure back migrant workers

April 28, 2008 · No Comments

Independent
By Jerome Taylor

For nearly four years, Britain’s construction and hospitality industries have flourished thanks to the influx of an estimated one million Polish workers – but now Poland wants them back. The Warsaw government is so worried about a national labour shortage in the professions that it plans to advertise in the UK to encourage expatriate Poles to return to the country that many of them left after it joined the European Union.

According to Polish media reports, the adverts will soon appear in English and Polish-language newspapers in this country. They are part of a wider campaign by the newly elected government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who swept to power six months ago with a pledge to encourage migrant workers to return.

However, there is mounting evidence that many Poles are already heading back east, particularly because the current weakness of Britain’s currency means they are getting fewer zlotys for their pounds.

Mr Tusk’s administration has produced a brochure that it plans to give away with Polish newspapers and at the many Polish cultural centres across Britain. The Handbook for Re-Emigrants advises Poles how to find accommodation back home and apply for special loans.

After Poland joined the EU in May 2004, an estimated two million people – about 10 per cent of the population – left to find work, predominantly in Britain and Ireland. But while the British and Irish economies benefited from the influx of cheap and willing labour, Poland suffered acute staff shortages, particularly in the building and and hospitality trades.

Of major concern to Warsaw is the lack of skilled construction workers needed to build new football stadiums before the European championships in 2012, which Poland and the Ukraine will host jointly. The government estimates that up to 200,000 extra workers are needed to complete the multibillion-euro projects earmarked for the event.

In the past year, the Polish government has introduced a series of measures aimed at encouraging Poles to return. It has abolished a rule which meant migrant workers were liable to pay taxes both in Britain and at home. Mr Tusk’s government also wants to grant a five-year amnesty to those who have failed to pay taxes in Poland while working abroad.

His opponents say this proposal is unconstitutional but, if approved, it will no doubt prove attractive to thousands of expats who have put off returning because they fear they will be receive a large tax bill when they arrive.

Estimating how many Poles return home each year is difficult because the government does not record the figure. However, many analysts believe that east European immigration to Britain may already have peaked. The numbers of east European migrants approved to work in Britain dropped from 227,875 in 2006 to 206,905 last year – a fall of nearly 10 per cent.

This may be because employment prospects in Poland have improved dramatically since it joined the EU. The current unemployment rate is 10 per cent – half what it was four years ago. Currency exchange rates may also have an effect on migration. When Poland entered the EU in 2004, £1 was worth seven zlotys; now it is worth only 4.2 zlotys.

Wojiech Pisasrki, a spokesman for the Polish embassy in London, believes there is evidence to suggest that the number of Poles coming to the UK may be the same as the number who are going home. “The process of leaving has already started,” he said. “Immigration to Britain is not as attractive a prospect as it was a few years ago.”

Jacek Winnicki, a Polish lawyer who has settled in London, said he doubted that an advertising campaign would encourage many of his countrymen to return.

“Work is just one of many factors behind why people chose to live where they do,” he added. “I don’t think an advert saying ‘come back to Poland’ will work, but I do think it will make Poles think and maybe a few will be tempted to leave.”

Categories: english classes · ethnic minority communities · immigrants · integration · jobs

Migrants are key to future for business

March 26, 2008 · No Comments

Scotsman

SKILLED migrant workers in Scotland are set to bring £2.4 billion to the UK economy over the next four years, a report by a recruitment agency has claimed.

The Future Flows report compiled for Harvey Nash by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) has predicted that Scotland will host around 26,000 migrant workers over the period – making up 3 per cent of the UK total.

The workers, who are likely to be employed in industries such as financial services and IT, will mainly come from the European Union, including new accession states such as Romania and Bulgaria.

In addition to filling and creating jobs, CEBR also forecasts that spending by migrant workers will bring £13bn to the Scottish economy by 2012.

Harvey Nash’s chief executive, Albert Ellis, said: “Skills are critical to the UK economy, but critically lacking in our current workforce. Far from undermining the UK labour market, migration is vital to future economic stability, helping to fill in the gaps created by older and under-skilled workforces and make a important vital economic contribution.

“Businesses in Scotland need to embrace skilled migration, as well as offer flexible and rewarding working practices for home-grown talent, in order to safeguard their long-term and global competitiveness.”

Categories: Housing · ethnic minority communities · immigrants · integration · jobs · new migrants

Slipping through the net

February 12, 2008 · No Comments

Sunday Herald

A study of Scotland’s Polish population finds while most are in paid work, language difficulties leave many open to exploitation. Home Affairs Editor John Bynorth reports.

POLISH WORKERS moving to Scotland are at risk of exploitation by employers because most have only basic English skills, even several years after arriving in the country, and many are not registering with the home office.

The largest study undertaken into the lifestyles of some of the 86,000 poles who have moved to Scotland in the past three years suggests that almost half are unable to communicate in English.

However, more than 80% are not attending English classes because working commitments don’t allow it.

The study also found that one in four have not joined the home office Workers’ Registration Scheme (WRS), which must be done within one month of starting work in the UK.

That means the government has no record of their employment, leaving them exposed to unscrupulous employers who might fail to deduct tax and National Insurance from wages.

The Fife Partnership - a multi-agency group which co-ordinates the area’s local authority, police, NHS and other bodies - ordered the study in an attempt to understand better the needs of migrant workers, because of a lack of information about how many migrants lived in the area and the issues they faced.

The area has seen the largest influx of Polish migrants in Scotland in recent years, with unofficial estimates suggesting that 15,000 now live there; a figure that is double the 7000 living in Glasgow and more than the 10,000 estimated in Edinburgh.

The study found that: l More than 90% of migrant workers are currently in paid work.

l More than 70% did not make use of their qualifications and skills in their current job; 52% have a university degree or undergraduate-level qualification.

l 5% said their UK employers did not recognise their qualifications at all.

l 16% had not been given a contract and 6% did not receive a pay slip.

l 40% worked in factory or processing jobs, with a further 10% in the construction industry.

l More than half had English language skills “good enough to communicate” and only 11% said they were “very good”.

l 82% are not attending English classes, mainly because of their working hours.

l 2% of employers provide studies in the language; only 1% allow paid time off to study English and less than 10% allow them unpaid time off to attend lessons.

l 25% of the immigrants had experienced verbal abuse, while 5% had suffered physical abuse as a result of their ethnic background or nationality.

Some migrant workers complained to the Sunday Herald that unscrupulous employers are “taking advantage” of their lack of English skills and unfamiliarity with the WRS.

The results of the survey have led to renewed calls from an MP and trade union leaders for better working practices towards migrants.

Labour MP Ann McKechin is sponsoring a private member’s bill in the House of Commons which aims to end the practice of agency workers, who include many migrants, being employed on lower pay and worse conditions that regular staff.

McKechin claimed that not enough information about employment rights is provided for migrants and added that in her Glasgow North constituency the migrant, mainly Polish population, is “growing by 50% a year”.

She added: “You are beginning to see a lot of agency workers who don’t have English as their main language, and they are not familiar with their rights.

“Sometimes the Polish are reluctant to join the unions because of the political connotations it has back home, but when the Scottish Trades Union Congress STUC held a meeting in Glasgow a lot of them came forward with stories about how they hadn’t been paid for holidays and overtime. “We’ve done a lot of work helping asylum seekers, but there is no funding specifically for the needs of people from Eastern Europe and how we handle them.”

The STUC, which is supporting the bill, urged the government to end the practice of employing agency staff at a lower rate. Dave Moxham, deputy general secretary of the STUC, said the problems of migrants being denied access to career advancement would affect UK citizens attempting to get lower paid jobs in the long term and will eventually lead to social problems as the government attempts to get people off benefits and into work.

He blamed backlogs in further education courses for the failure of many migrants to learn English as a second language, despite increases in funding for English-language training from the Scottish and UK governments.

Moxham said: “Employers tend to teach them the minimum needed to get by. But that prevents them moving to other jobs up the skills ladder.

“The Scottish Government has given more funding to ESL (English as a second language) training, but there are still massive queues and backlogs in further education colleges with no resources to teach migrant workers to learn the language. If we don’t get these migrant workers up the career ladder, we are going to end up with lots of them competing with indigenous workers chasing the same low-skilled jobs, which is socially divisive.”

The STUC has called for the government and local authorities to work more closely together to provide contact centres and “umbrella” services for migrants in town centres.

Moxham added: “A lot of the problems of large numbers of migrants involved in prostitution start in the workplace. If, in your first job, it’s not explained that you need to register with the WRS, you immediately fall into an illegal situation. It’s a downward spiral as you have absolutely no recourse to advice and rights.”

The main point of contact for advice for migrant workers is the Scottish Government-backed Relocation Advisory Service. It has provided a range of information services, from getting a job to housing, for 17,000 people since it opened in Glasgow in 2004.

It provides a welcome package with details about living and working in Scotland, plus information on cultural networks, diversity and equality issues, how to seek employment, accommodation, and permits and visa issues.

Other support services for migrant workers across Scotland are overstretched. While many Poles turn to the Catholic Church to make friends, some travel 60 to 90 miles from Glasgow and Edinburgh to seek help from a Dundee drop-in centre.

Doreen Dowdles, who co-ordinates the city’s Advice and Services Centre, deals with a range of issues with the help of an interpreter.

Doreen has been known to take appointments from people by mobile phone at Polish airports as they are preparing to come to Britain.

She said: “We are swamped, dealing with anything from Home Office papers to organising National Insurance to finding accommodation. People tend to come here because there’s nothing like us across the board in Scotland. Dundee doesn’t have a problem with migrants, but we are mopping them all up.”

Maciej Dokurno, an interpreter and well-known figure in the Fife Polish Association who interviewed migrants for the survey, said the Scottish Government overall must do more to ensure information gets through to the community, claiming that money spent on translated leaflets is often wasted as migrants don’t pick them up.

Dokurno said: “I spend up to 40 hours a week on a voluntary basis helping people, attending meetings with Fife Council and trying to give people the basic information they should already have. What is needed is a strategic and organised centre where they can get information in Fife. Dundee is a good example.”

The Polish government is also taking a keen interest in the needs of Poles in Scotland. Last week, two senators met a group of migrants in Fife to discuss some of their concerns.

Senator Andrej Person said: “It’s still a better situation to be Polish in Scotland, than in Ireland and England, as relations between the Polish people and the Scottish are fantastic. We have to listen to their problems and set up strategies so that they understand the language, and their children understand Polish. It’s better to be Polish in Scotland than in London, because there is such a good sense of community here.”

Categories: Housing · Services · ethnic minority communities · immigrants · integration · jobs · new migrants · statistics

Job Opportunity at Positive Action in Housing - Building Links Project

October 5, 2007 · No Comments

Development Worker, Building Links
(14 hours) £17, 050 pro rata (£6,820)
Fixed Term to 31st May 2008

Positive Action in Housing is a dynamic minority ethnic led charity working with communities and others to enable everyone to have an equal chance to live in good quality, affordable and safe housing, free from discrimination and the fear of racial harassment and violence.

An exciting and challenging role has been created to assist in strategically developing the capacity of black and minority ethnic (BME) organisations to devise and deliver solutions to their member and client’s housing problems and to increase their impact on the policies and practices of housing providers. Your aim is to bring about increases in the uptake of services from BME communities. This will be done by facilitating contact between BME groups and housing providers through innovative community-led joint working and events.

The successful candidate will build on previous successes of the project, work with stakeholders in both BME communities and groups and service providers and facilitate meaningful and beneficial interaction. You will support and empower both individuals and communities to deliver better results on chronic housing problems; i.e. racial harassment and overcrowding.

The successful candidate for this role will require the ability to plan, organise and execute tasks to conclusion within given timescales whilst working on their own initiative with minimal supervision. The role will also require excellent communication skills and the ability to communicate effectively with members of Scotland’s BME communities. The successful candidate will be highly computer literate, able to prioritise workloads, and work as part of our team. You will have knowledge or experience of the housing issues affecting BME communities in Scotland today

Positive Action in Housing actively promotes equal opportunities throughout our jobs, services and activities and actively encourages applications from all sections of the community.

Closing date: 12 Noon, Friday 19th October 2007
Interviews will be held on Friday 26th October 2007

For an application pack (CVs will not be accepted),
Contact: The Admin Team, Positive Action in Housing, 98 West George Street GLASGOW G2 1PJ. Tel: 0141 353 2220 Fax: 0141 353 3882

Email: adminteam@paih.org or download at www.paih.org

Investors in People Positive About Disabled People

Categories: jobs

Latest Jobs: New Migrants Project Manager

January 16, 2007 · No Comments

NEW MIGRANTS PROJECT MANAGER
C. £22,000 per annum
+ optional 5% contributory pension scheme
30 days annual leave + 15 days public holidays
You will be given a high level of autonomy to develop this innovative project for Scotland’s new migrant communities.  Using a rights based approach, you will lead the way in working with new migrant communities and service providers to ensure equality of opportunity, aiding new migrants to be aware of their rights and service providers to meet their obligations. Highly computer literate, you will have excellent project management skills, and a sound knowledge of the needs and aspirations of new migrants. Closing date for application is 12 Noon Friday 2 February 2007. Interviews will take place on Friday 9 February 2007.

FOR AN APPLICATION PACK GO TO www.paih.org.

Alternatively, you can get an application pack by contacting:

Kam Kaur
Administrative & Finance Manager
Positive Action in Housing
98 West George Street
GLASGOW G2 1PJ
Tel: 0141 353 2220
Email: kam@paih.org
www.paih.org

Categories: jobs